We're all explorers. You just need the right guide.

Stony Creek Metropark is huge. So huge, there’s room for 70 km of trails, spread throughout the park, with trails suitable to nearly any activity.

There are rattlesnakes in the park, but they usually stay well away from explorers. Anywhere in the north end of the park, around the nature center or Inwood trails, leaving the trails greatly increases your risk of a rattlesnake encounter, so staying on the trails is strongly suggested.

Paved Trail:

There is one paved loop trail in Stony Creek Metropark. Circling Stony Creek Lake, the 10.5 km of trail includes the main loop, with spurs to both Eastwood Beach and Baypoint Beach, as well as another connecting spur trail south, out of the park entrance, to the Shelby Township hike-bike trail network. Access to the trail is available anywhere around the main road encircling Stony Creek Lake.

Nature Center Area Trails:

The Nature Center, located at the north end of the main park, is the center of the nature trail network. Except for the Inwood Trails and Osprey Trail, all nature trails are best accessed from the Nature Center parking lot. The trails adjacent to the nature center are well-marked and well-maintained.

Reflection Trail: At just under 1 km, this is one of the shorter trails, but still worth hiking. Beginning at the nature center, descend to Stony Creek, then travel a short distance along the creek before returning to the nature center. No pets are allowed on this trail.

Landscape Trail: This 2.5 km trail is the middle-length loop of the main nature trail area, located west of the nature center. With a combination of creekside trails, woods, and wetlands, this trail offers a good mix of the local ecosystems. No pets are allowed on this trail.

Habitat Trail: The longest of the main nature area trails, at 4.3 km, this trail traverses woodlands and wetlands, with plenty of variety, even including a walk past a meadow with a “high” rattlesnake population. No pets are allowed on this trail.

East Lake Trail: Located across the parking lot from the nature center, the East Lake trail is a 5.7 km trail, with several opportunities to shorten the trail on established shortcut trails. This trail travels along the east side of the small lake formed by the north dam. At the far end of the trail, you go onto a short, sandy point where snapping turtles lay hundreds of eggs every year. A shirt spur off this trail takes you to the osprey hacking tower. No pets are allowed on this trail.

Osprey Trail: Across the lake from the East Lake Trail is the 2.1 km Osprey Trail. Less maintained, and less traveled, than the other nature center area trails, this trail gives you the opportunity to take a quiet stroll through the easy, relatively level woodlands, possibly without seeing anyone else on the trails, even on a busy day. There is a small parking lot at the entrance to the Osprey Trail, or you can walk out on the spur from the East Lake Trail, past the hacking tower, to the road, cross over Stony Creek, then go back into the woods on the Osprey Trail.

Inwood Trails:

The Inwood Trails are located on a reclaimed gravel pit, north of the main park area. You can access the Inwood Trails via a small lot off Inwood Road, or by walking down a service drive out the north end of the nature center parking lot.

The trails are not well maintained, but this shouldn’t discourage you from exploring here. While not groomed, may be some of the nicest cross country skiing in the park. When there’s no snow on the ground, the gravel pit history of this area means the ground his hard packed gravel, with clusters of trees, with the remaining area filled with quick-growing groundcover. Unfortunately, this is the absolutely perfect habitat for ticks (4 were picked up while surveying the trails for our app), so be sure to use plenty of insect repellant, frequently check for ticks, and dress appropriately.

Inwood South Loop: This 5 km trail loops around the small, artificial lake at the south end of the Inwood area, and explores many of the non-wooded ecosystems in this area.

Inwood North Loop: At 4km, this trail visits the more wooded parts of the Inwood area in the northern area. A short hike on the northern spur takes you to the shores of Inwood Lake.

Inwood Big Loop: At 5.8 km, the Big Loop trail completely encircles the Inwood area, including the areas visited with both the north and south loop trails.

Trolley Trails:

The Trolley Trails are located in the southeast part of the park, near the entrance. The least-used trails in the main park, the Trolley Trails allow both hikers and mountain bikes. With well-maintained trails traversing hilly, wooded terrain, this is a good trail network when you’re looking for a nice, shaded hike without a lot of people. The mountain bike skills course is accessed from the same parking lot as the Trolley Trails.

Trolley Trails East Loop: This 2.5 km loop covers the hilliest part of the Trolley Trail area, looping around several deep ravines.

Trolley Trails West Loop: At 2.2 km, this loop covers the western, flatter part of the Trolley Trail area.

The 3km Fitness Trail loop starts and ends at Eastwood Beach. Traversing the loop, you encounter stations along the way with instructions for 31 activities, including stretches, to give you a good workout in a short distance. Approximately half the trail follows the paved trail, before it loops back through the woods to head back to the beach.

Mountain Bike Trails:

The main mountain bike trail network is mostly on the ruins of the Sheldon Estate. Although not much is left of this estate, there’s plenty to see, if you look for it, including the fenced ruins of the tennis court, a stairway, old roads, and a lot of fencing, which once enclosed the estate.

Mountain biking is allowed on both the main mountain bike trails and on the Trolley Trails. Hiking and cross country skiing is also allowed, so bikers are advised to keep an eye out for hikers, who always have the right of way on trails.

The easy trails in this area are all two-lane trails. The hard, and some of the medium trails, are one-lane, so are one-way for bikes (still two-way for hikers). The intersections are all clearly marked with maps, and one-way trails are marked with no-bike signs, if you’re headed the wrong direction.

During the winter, cross country ski rentals are available at the golf course clubhouse, with access to this trail network.

Mountain Bike Trails – Hard – A 10 km trail, this route goes through the extreme hills in the middle of the trail network. Switchbacks along ravines, steep climbs, and narrow tracks are the norm for this challenging trail.